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My sister and her husband live in 400 sq ft in Hawaii. They even have a yard with chickens, and take care of the feral cats. They are in their 60s and live their days walking, hiking, swimming, biking, surfing, reading. They are a 15 minute bike ride to the beach.
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omg this is us! Even the 2 dogs and a cat! |
Beautiful locale. My issue is winter . . . it can get cold there. But I suppose a few months in the northeast would be ok
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| It can get down to the upper 50s (F) in June, July, and August. You think that is cold? |
| Brazil seems like a tough place to me to retire, and say that as someone who has some fluency in Brazilian Portuguese. I think I’d worry too much about security and just being able to navigate a place that, unlike Portugal, doesn’t have a lot of ex-pats. |
We were planning on doing the same, but DC’s juvenile crime spree is making me think twice. |
Brrr…too cold! |
Florianopolis is choc-full of expats. It is one of the reason I chose it. I love cool-cold weather. I'll be heading over to Chile for some winter skiing. I am fluent in Brazilian Portuguese. I double-majored in International Relations and Portuguese. |
How much does that run these days? And what about visas or residency? |
I know plenty of people skiing through their 80s. Speak for yourself. |
+1 I have a friend who moved there in her late 40s with her early 40s husband. I. Do. Not. Get it. |
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My parents tried to live in a retirement community-they hated it.
Moved into a normal neighborhood with a mix of ages and are much happier now. |
The “mix of ages” thing is overrated IMO. Once you’re in your forties, you’re pretty much invisible to younger people. There are lots of millennials & Gen Z in our neighborhood but we have almost zero interaction with them. I’d rather save my energy to focus building relationships with folks our own age. |
I’m the PP who said that less than 1200 square-feet is unlivable. Two points. First, it’s different when you’re away all day at work versus in retirement when you’d be home ALL. THE. TIME. (In my case, I’m not retired but I work from home and can confirm that you will go crazy if you spend all your time in a tiny box of less than 1200 square-feet.) And second, I was referring to a condo/apartment since the PP mentioned a 400 square-foot apartment in Paris. There is a HUGE difference between your 1200 square-foot house and a 1200 square-foot apartment. Being able to step outside in nature for a few minutes a few times a day makes a small interior much more bearable. So yeah, for those planning on living in an apartment in retirement, anything less than 1200 square-feet is unlivable. |
That's not really the point. When emergencies or natural disasters happen, it's comforting to know strong able bodied people are nearby. I survived a Florida hurricane once, in my late 40s. I was one of the youngest people there. Older people could barely move to help themselves. |